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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ryanair Ltd v HM Revenue and Customs [2014] EWCA Civ 410 (04 April 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/410.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 410 |
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ON APPEAL FROM HM COURTS AND TRIBUNALS SERVICE
UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX & CHANCERY CHAMBER)
MR JUSTICE WARREN, CHAMBER PRESIDENT AND JUDGE COLIN BISHOPP
FTC/20/2012 and TCC-JR/05/2012
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE PITCHFORD
____________________
RYANAIR LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr James Eadie QC and Mr Simon Pritchard (instructed by HM Revenue and Customs) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 10 March 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"(1) A duty to be known as air passenger duty shall be charged in accordance with this Chapter on the carriage on a chargeable aircraft of any chargeable passenger.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this Chapter about accounting and payment, the duty in respect of any carriage on an aircraft of a chargeable passenger—
(a) becomes due when the aircraft first takes off on the passenger's flight, and
(b) shall be paid by the operator of the aircraft.
(3) Subject to section 29 below, every aircraft designed or adapted to carry persons in addition to the flight crew is a chargeable aircraft for the purposes of this Chapter.
(4) Subject to sections 31 and 32 below, every passenger on an aircraft is a chargeable passenger for the purposes of this Chapter if his flight begins at an airport in the United Kingdom.
(5) In this Chapter, 'flight', in relation to any person, means his carriage on an aircraft; and for the purposes of this Chapter, a person's flight is to be treated as beginning when he first boards the aircraft and ending when he finally disembarks from the aircraft."
"(5) Subject to subsection (6) below, the journey of a passenger whose agreement for carriage is evidenced by a ticket ends for the purposes of this section at his final place of destination.
(6) Where in the case of such a passenger—
(a) his journey includes two or more flights, and
(b) any of those flights is not followed by a connected flight,
his journey ends for those purposes where the first flight not followed by a connected flight ends.
(7) The journey of any passenger whose agreement for carriage is not evidenced by a ticket ends for those purposes where his flight ends.
(8) For the purposes of this Chapter, successive flights are connected if (and only if) they are treated under an order as connected."
"A passenger whose agreement for carriage is evidenced by a ticket is not a chargeable passenger in relation to a flight which is the second or a subsequent flight on his journey if—
(a) the prescribed particulars of the flight are shown on the ticket,
and
(b) that flight and the previous flight are connected."
"(1) For the purposes of section 31(3) of the Act the following particulars of a second or subsequent flight are prescribed—
(a) the airport from which the passenger intends to depart;
(b) the date and time of his intended departure; and
(c) the airport at which he intends to arrive."
"Interpretation
2. The provisions of the Schedule to this Order, including the Notes next mentioned, shall be interpreted and applied in accordance with the notes contained therein.
Rules for determining whether successive flights are connected
3. The provisions of the Schedule to this Order shall be used, in respect of the transfer of a passenger as described therein, for determining whether successive flights are treated as connected for the purpose of section 30(6), or section 31(3), of the Finance Act 1994."
"The passenger's previous flight ("Flight A"), and the next flight after it on his journey ("Flight B") on which he is carried domestically, are connected if the booked time of departure of Flight B is by or at the time or within the period in column 3 of the following Table specified opposite to the period of time (specified in column 2 of that Table) into which the scheduled time of arrival of Flight A falls on the scheduled day of arrival."
"(1) "Booked", in relation to a time or an airport, means the time or the airport that is specified expressly and correctly on the passenger's ticket at the time it is issued or last amended, by reference to the journey to be undertaken by the passenger constituted wholly or partly by Flight A and Flight B.
(2) If the ticket does not specify correctly and expressly the time or the airport in question, having regard to the journey undertaken by the passenger which is constituted wholly or partly by Flight A and Flight B (so that the flights in question are not connected), then those flights shall nevertheless be connected where the aircraft operator who would be liable, but for this Note, for the air passenger duty in question satisfies the Commissioners that, had the ticket in question been correctly and expressly specified with the time or the airport in question, the two Flights A and B in question would have been connected by virtue of this Rule.
(3) A passenger is carried domestically where the booked airport for the beginning and ending of his flight is in the United Kingdom.
(4) "Scheduled" means:—
(a) in relation to a time, the time indicated in the operator's timetable for the flight in question at the time the passenger's ticket is issued or last amended; and
(b) in relation to "the day of arrival", the day of arrival indicated in the operator's timetable for the flight in question at the time the passenger's ticket is issued or last amended.
(5) Notwithstanding the effect of this Rule that, but for this Note, would result, Flight A and Flight B are not connected:—
(a) where the booked airport of departure of Flight A is the same airport as the booked airport of arrival of Flight B; or
(b) where the ticket for Flight A and the ticket for Flight B are not conjunction tickets.
(6) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of Note (5) the two tickets in question are only conjunction tickets at the time of issue or when last amended:—
(a) if those tickets are contained in one booklet of tickets; or
(b) in the case of each of those tickets being contained in a separate booklet of tickets, if:—
(i) each of those booklets is referable to the other by virtue of a statement on each to the effect that each is to be read in conjunction with the other; or
(ii) each booklet or each ticket in question has as a part of it a summary of the flights of the passenger constituting his journey, which includes the flights in question.
(7) "Ticket", for the purposes of this Rule, means the ticket in the form of a coupon, or the coupon (as it is sometimes called in the airline industry), issued for the passenger in relation to his intended flight specifying the time of and the airport of departure for that flight."
"Case B Rule, governing a transfer to an international flight
2. The following rule (the "Case B Rule") applies in the case of a passenger who transfers to an aircraft on which he is carried internationally.
CASE B RULE
"The passenger's previous flight ("Flight A"), and the next flight after it on his journey ("Flight B") on which he is carried internationally, are connected if the booked time of departure of Flight B falls within the period of 24 hours starting at the scheduled time of arrival of Flight A.
Notes of interpretation for the Case B Rule and these Notes
(1) The Notes of Interpretation for the Case A Rule and its Notes (set out above) numbered (1), (2), (4) limited to its sub-paragraph (a), (5) limited to its sub-paragraph (b), (6) and (7) shall be used for the interpretation and application of this Rule and its Notes.
(2) A passenger is carried internationally where his flight begins at an airport in one country and ends at an airport in another country; and for the purposes of this Note the United Kingdom, subject to the provisions of Note (4), is a country.
(3) Notwithstanding the effect of this Rule that, but for this Note, would result, Flight A and Flight B are not connected where the airport at which the passenger first boards the aircraft for Flight A is in the same country as that at which the passenger finally disembarks from the aircraft for Flight B."
"4.7 Conjunction tickets
The tickets for Flight A and Flight B must be conjunction tickets (for which see Notes 5(b) and (6) to the Case A rule: these apply to the Case B rule by virtue of its Note (1)).
Conjunction tickets are a present practice of the airline industry.
The reason for this requirement of the relief is to enable the airline industry operator, and in particular his ticket issuing agent when issuing the ticket, to determine his liability for APD and any associated relief arising by virtue of this order, in respect of the passenger in question, from not only the top copy of the tickets when issued, but also the counterfoils of the tickets which he retains for the purpose of making a return after the passenger has flown."
"The Rules are framed in terms of the length of time between the scheduled time of arrival of the first flight and the booked time of departure of the second flight. Each of these rules is to be interpreted in accordance with a number of notes relating to it, also contained in the Schedule. The Treasury explain in their second memorandum on the Order, printed in Appendix III, that "In the course of settling the contents of the schedule it became apparent that some notes needed to be qualified, and it was believed that this would be achieved best in some cases by adding a note that made that qualification. An example is Note (2) and Note (4) of the Case B Rule set out in paragraph 2 of the schedule". The Treasury confirm that the distinction between "Notes" and "note" in article 2 is intended to convey a distinction between a note qualifying a rule, on the one hand, and a note qualifying another note, on the other. The Treasury also explain that the phrase "next mentioned" in Article 2 is intended to refer to "the notes contained herein" at the end of the Article. The Committee reports article 2 on the ground of defective drafting giving rise to a need for the elucidation provided by the memorandum, a need which is exacerbated by the use of a capital letter for "Notes" in one place but not in the other in article 2 and in all places in the Schedule. The Committee notes the intention to clarify the article by re-drafting it following the review of the working of the order by the Commissioners of Customs and Excise after October 1995.
The second and third cases considered by the Committee to be defectively drafted are similar to each other. Notes (2) and (5) to the Case A Rule in the Schedule, far from providing interpretation of the Case A Rule or qualification of other Notes to the Case A Rule, make substantive provision and, accordingly, their content should have been incorporated in the Case A Rule itself rather than constituting Notes thereto. There are in fact several Case A Rules, although some are disguised as mere Notes; the drafting should have reflected the reality. The Committee therefore reports Notes (2) and (5) of paragraph 1 of the Schedule on the ground of defective drafting. Similarly, Note (1) to the Case B Rule, insofar as it applies Notes (2) and (5) to the Case A Rule, and Note (3) to the Case B Rule make substantive provision and do not provide interpretation of the Case B Rule or qualification of the other Notes thereto. Accordingly, the Committee also reports Note 1 to the Case B Rule, insofar as it applies Notes (2) and (5) to the Case A Rule, and Note 3 to the Case B Rule on the ground of defective drafting."
"The presumption that every word in a statute must be given some effective meaning is a strong one, but the courts have on occasion been driven to disregard particular words or phrases when, by giving effect to them, the operation of the statute would be rendered insensible, absurd or ineffective to achieve its evident purpose. The principle is shortly stated by Brett J. in Stone v. Yeovil Corporation (1876) 1 C.P.D. 691, 701 where he said:
"It is a canon of construction that, if it be possible, effect must be given to every word of an Act of Parliament or other document; but that, if there be a word or a phrase therein to which no sensible meaning can be given, it must be eliminated."
"(a) the prescribed particulars of the flight are shown on the ticket, and
(b) that flight and the previous flight are connected."
"More specifically, in relation to the point at issue, we cannot improve on the reasoning of Sir Stanley Burnton in the Court of Appeal, where he said this:
"75. Where Parliament in a statute has required that something be prescribed in delegated legislation, it envisages, and I think requires, that the delegated legislation adds something to what is contained in the primary legislation. There is otherwise no point in the requirement that the matter in question be prescribed in delegated legislation. However, the description of the Employment, Skills and Enterprise Scheme in the 2011 Regulations adds nothing to the description of such schemes in the Act. ... In effect, the Secretary of State contends that any scheme he creates is a scheme within the meaning of section 17A notwithstanding that it is not described in any regulations made under the Act. Furthermore, it is not possible to identify any provision of the Regulations that can be said to satisfy the requirement that the description be 'determined in accordance with' the Regulations. …
76. Description of a scheme in regulations is important from the point of view of Parliamentary oversight of the work of the administration. It is also important in enabling those who are required to participate in a scheme, or at least those advising them, to ascertain whether the requirement has been made in accordance with Parliamentary authority. …"
"As regards Note (5): this is intended to tell the reader that even though the flights in question appear to come within the Case A Rule (ie the flights in question appear to be connected) the flights are not to be treated as connected where the circumstances described in paragraph (a) or (b) apply.
As indicated in paragraph 2 above, it was intended that the meaning and ambit of both of the Rules should be gathered from a self contained code.
Notes (2) and (5) could have been the subject of a paragraph of the schedule (in the same way that all of the provisions of the schedule could have been the subject of paragraphs instead of rules and notes). However, because the rules are to be read in conjunction with the notes, it was felt that a qualification of a rule or of a note should be set out in a note."
"8. The basic task of the court is to ascertain and give effect to the true meaning of what Parliament has said in the enactment to be construed. But that is not to say that attention should be confined and a literal interpretation given to the particular provisions which give rise to difficulty. Such an approach not only encourages immense prolixity in drafting, since the draftsman will feel obliged to provide expressly for every contingency which may possibly arise. It may also (under the banner of loyalty to the will of Parliament) lead to the frustration of that will, because undue concentration on the minutiae of the enactment may lead the court to neglect the purpose which Parliament intended to achieve when it enacted the statute. Every statute other than a pure consolidating statute is, after all, enacted to make some change, or address some problem, or remove some blemish, or effect some improvement in the national life. The court's task, within the permissible bounds of interpretation, is to give effect to Parliament's purpose. So the controversial provisions should be read in the context of the statute as a whole, and the statute as a whole should be read in the historical context of the situation which led to its enactment.
9. There is, I think, no inconsistency between the rule that statutory language retains the meaning it had when Parliament used it and the rule that a statute is always speaking. If Parliament, however long ago, passed an Act applicable to dogs, it could not properly be interpreted to apply to cats; but it could properly be held to apply to animals which were not regarded as dogs when the Act was passed but are so regarded now. The meaning of "cruel and unusual punishments" has not changed over the years since 1689, but many punishments which were not then thought to fall within that category would now be held to do so. The courts have frequently had to grapple with the question whether a modern invention or activity falls within old statutory language: see Bennion, Statutory Interpretation, 4th ed (2002) Part XVIII, Section 288. A revealing example is found in Grant v Southwestern and County Properties Ltd [1975] Ch 185, where Walton J had to decide whether a tape recording fell within the expression "document" in the Rules of the Supreme Court. Pointing out (page 190) that the furnishing of information had been treated as one of the main functions of a document, the judge concluded that the tape recording was a document."
Conclusions
Lord Justice Pitchford :
The Master of the Rolls :